Abstract

ABSTRACT: A case study of the creation and implementation of a four‐tier, integrated system of health care services in a sparsely populated, rural province in Argentina is described and discussed. Begun in 1970 in a diverse geographical area with a tradition of poor health status and inadequate health care resources, the provincial government set out to develop the human, physical and technological resources needed to provide a system of preventive and curative services appropriate to the health care needs of its residents. Innovative programs included training in management techniques, and epidemiological perspective of high risk, an emphasis on personnel development through a rural general medicine residency and an expanded nursing program as well as programs to attack infectious diseases, poor sanitation and dental problems were all developed in response to the distinctive features of the physical and social environment of the province. Improvements in traditional health indicators are reviewed and attributed to the program and administrative structures that were developed.

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